Department for Integrative Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Ecol Lett. 2024 Feb;27(2):e14370. doi: 10.1111/ele.14370.
Species coexistence in ecological communities is a central feature of biodiversity. Different concepts, i.e., contemporary niche theory, modern coexistence theory, and the unified neutral theory, have identified many building blocks of such ecological assemblies. However, other factors, such as phenotypic plasticity and stochastic inter-individual variation, have received little attention, in particular in animals. For example, how resource polyphenisms resulting in predator-prey interactions affect coexistence is currently unknown. Here, we present an integrative theoretical-experimental framework using the nematode plasticity model Pristionchus pacificus with its well-studied mouth-form dimorphism resulting in cannibalism. We develop an individual-based model that relies upon synthetic data based on our empirical measurements of fecundity and polyphenism to preserve demographic heterogeneity. We demonstrate how the interplay between plasticity and individual stochasticity result in all-or-nothing outcomes at the local level. Coexistence is made possible when spatial structure is introduced.
物种共存是生态群落生物多样性的一个核心特征。不同的概念,如当代生态位理论、现代共存理论和统一中性理论,确定了许多生态组合的构建块。然而,其他因素,如表型可塑性和随机个体间变异,受到的关注较少,特别是在动物中。例如,导致捕食者-猎物相互作用的资源多态性如何影响共存,目前尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用具有良好研究基础的口型二态性导致同类相食的太平洋秀丽隐杆线虫可塑性模型,提出了一个综合理论-实验框架。我们开发了一个基于个体的模型,该模型依赖于基于我们对生育力和多态性的经验测量的合成数据,以保持人口异质性。我们展示了可塑性和个体随机性之间的相互作用如何导致局部水平上的全有或全无的结果。当引入空间结构时,共存成为可能。